Selective packaging of mitochondrial proteins into extracellular vesicles prevents the release of mitochondrial DAMPs

Inflammation 0301 basic medicine Science Ubiquitin-Protein Ligases Q Parkinson Disease DNA, Mitochondrial Article GTP Phosphohydrolases Mitochondria Mitochondrial Proteins Extracellular Vesicles 03 medical and health sciences Alarmins Humans Lysosomes Sorting Nexins
DOI: 10.1101/2020.03.13.989814 Publication Date: 2020-03-14T02:25:15Z
ABSTRACT
AbstractMost cells constitutively secrete mitochondrial DNA and proteins in extracellular vesicles (EVs), small vesicles that allow the transfer of material between cells. While under pro-inflammatory conditions, this mitochondrial content can further enhance inflammation, its role in the absence of inflammation remains elusive. Here, we demonstrate that cells actively prevent the packaging of pro-inflammatory, oxidized mitochondrial proteins into EVs. Importantly, the distinction between material to be included into EVs and damaged mitochondrial content to be excluded was dependent on their selective targeting to one of two distinct Mitochondria-Derived Vesicles (MDVs) pathways, MDVs being small vesicles carrying material between mitochondria and other organelles. Sorting nexin 9 (Snx9)-dependent MDVs were required to target mitochondrial proteins into EVs, while the Parkinson’s disease related protein Parkin blocked this process by targeting damaged mitochondrial content to lysosomes. Our results thus provide important insight into the interplay between mitochondrial quality control mechanisms and mitochondria driven immune responses.
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